pkgparam

- display package parameter values

Synopsis

pkgparam [-v] [-ddevice] [-Rroot_path] pkginst [param]...

pkgparam-ffilename [-v] [param]...

Description

pkgparam displays the value associated with the parameter or parameters requested on
the command line. The values are located in either the pkginfo(4) file
for pkginst or from the specific file named with the -f option.

One parameter value is shown per line. Only the value of a
parameter is given unless the -v option is used. With this option,
the output of the command is in this format:

parameter1='value1'parameter2='value2'parameter3='value3'

If no parameters are specified on the command line, values for all
parameters associated with the package are shown.

Options

Options and arguments for this command are:

-ddevice

Specify the device on which a pkginst is stored. It can be a directory pathname or the identifiers for tape, floppy disk, or removable disk (for example, /var/tmp, /dev/diskette, and /dev/dsk/c1d0s0). The special token spool may be used to represent the default installation spool directory (/var/spool/pkg).

-ffilename

Read filename for parameter values.

-Rroot_path

Defines the full path name of a subdirectory to use as the root_path. All files, including package system information files, are relocated to a directory tree starting in the specified root_path.

-v

Verbose mode. Display name of parameter and its value.

Operands

pkginst

Defines a specific package instance for which parameter values should be displayed.

param

Defines a specific parameter whose value should be displayed.

Errors

If parameter information is not available for the indicated package, the command
exits with a non-zero status.

See Also

Notes

With the -f option, you can specify the file from which parameter
values should be extracted. This file should be in the same
format as a pkginfo(4) file. For example, such a file might be created
during package development and used while testing software during this stage.

Package commands are largefile(5)-aware. They handle files larger than 2 GB in
the same way they handle smaller files. In their current implementations, pkgadd(1M),
pkgtrans(1) and other package commands can process a datastream of up to
4 GB.